Friday, 26 May 2023

CELEBRATING PETER WILTON CUSHING BIRTHDAY TODAY : MAY 26TH 2023


 

ANOTHER YEAR and another opportunity to celebrate and mark the birthday of . . . Peter Cushing! Peter Wilton Cushing OBE born today May 26th 1913, in the town of Kenley, UK. For those who join us, for the first time today, you will find almost 13 years of posts, photographs, features, interviews, competitions and much more within our almost daily posts!
 

PETER CUSHING had a full and varied career, from theatre, to film in #Hollywood, to radio and a very successful career in television. Peter Cushing is maybe best known for his roles with the British horror and fantasy studios #Hammer and Amicus films, during the 50's 60's and 70's. In his career, he was fortunate to have the opportunity the make his mark and play some great and iconic roles, Baron Victor #Frankenstein, #VanHelsing in Hammer's #Dracula productions, the role of #SherlockHolmes on the big screen AND television. He also appeared in two feature film as #DrWho, fighting the legendary #Daleks
 

MAY 29th 1968: Peter and Christopher Lee on the set of DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE celebrate HAMMER FILMS winning The Queen's Award To Industry.
 




IN THE MID #70's when nearing retirement, Peter Cushing played the role of #GrandMoffTarkin in '#StarWars: A New Hope' (1977). Spanning over six decades, his acting career included appearances in more than 90 films. Today we mark his birthday, every day we celebrate his enormous talent and life! Help us celebrate today HERE and at the Peter Cushing Appreciation Society Facebook Fan Page UK, feel free to repost any of the three banners, made especially for today! - Marcus
 



I WAS SENT this earlier today at the PCASuk TWITTER ACCOUNT and was VERY happy to see who was 'trending' at over 4k for quite an extended time on Twitter today. UPDATE: 23.50pm gmt and Peter Cushing is STILL trending 😮👍- Marcus
 

IF YOU LIKE what you see here at our website, you'll  love our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE.  Just click that blue LINK and click LIKE when you get there, and help us . . Keep The Memory Alive!. The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society website, facebook fan page and youtube channel are managed, edited and written by Marcus Brooks, PCAS co-ordinator since 1979. PCASuk is based in the UK,  but open to everyone, whoever, where ever, YOU are!

Thursday, 13 April 2023

OUTSTANDING #HORROROFDRACULA #PETERCUSHING #CHRISTOPHERLEE EXCLUSIVE FIGURES DOUBLE PACKAGE FROM #KAUSTICPLASTIK & #INFINATE



IT'S A POST TODAY at the Peter Cushing Appreciation Society Facebook Page UK that's VERY popular! You will no doubt remember, the last time that, TWO superb figures of both #PeterCushing as #VanHelsing and #ChristopherLee as #CountDracula were released a few years ago... Well, it could very well be that, these TWO NEW stunners are probably THE NEW DEFINITIVE figures of Cushing and Lee from that #Hammerfilm 1958 feature film... Presenting, #KauticPlastik and #InfinateStatue Cushing and Lee Dracula / Horror of Dracula figures! How do you rate these figures and the THREE additional / different, that come with the figure? You can see these and take part in the debate at the PCASuk Facebook Fan Page, right now! All details below  . . . . : Marcus  
 
 

HORROR OF DRACULA!  THE OFFICIALLY LICENSED FIGURES in 1/6 Scale Double PACK EXCLUSIVE EDITION! Christopher Lee as Count Dracula & Peter Cushing as Van Helsing (1958 version) - Exclusive Edition Double pack contains EVERYTHING, including the WHITE COFFIN! A luxury edition for the true lovers of Hammer Movies! Available for pre-order NOW! NOTE: Double Package version contains ALSO the White Coffin!
 


HORROR OF DRACULA – DRACULA FIGURE - Double Pack – Exclusive Edition 200 pcs hand numbered
Features:
 
3 Lifelike Hand-painted Head sculpts (1958 Likeness)
1 Fully Articulated Body
8 Interchangeable Hands (No Wrist Pegs)
1 Black Jacket With Working Buttons And Eyelets
1 Black Gilet
1 Pair Of Black Pants
1 White Shirt
1 Black Tie
1 Pair Of Black Boots (Magnetic)
1 Black Cape
1 Candelabra
1 Magnetic Stand
 


HORROR OF DRACULA Van Helsing Figure – Double Pack – Exclusive Edition 200 pcs hand numbered
Features:
 
3 Lifelike Hand-painted Head sculpts (1958 Likeness)
1 Fully Articulated Body
8 Interchangeable Gloved Hands
1 Grey Jacket With Working Buttons And Eyelets
1 Red Gilet
1 Pair Of Grey Pants
1 White Shirt
1 Black Tie
1 Long Coat
1 Scarf
1 Pair Of Black Boots (Magnetic)
2 Candelabras
1 Hammer
1 Stake
1 Cross
1 Magnetic Stand
1 Luxury Artwork


This release ONLY: The luxury Dracula White Coffin
Luxury Double Package

 

 
SEE THE FIGURES IN CLOSE DETAIL IN PROMO ABOVE

PLACE YOUR PRE-ORDER HERE NOW! 
 



IF YOU LIKE what you see here at our website, you'll  love our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE.  Just click that blue LINK and click LIKE when you get there, and help us . . Keep The Memory Alive!. The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society website, facebook fan page and youtube channel are managed, edited and written by Marcus Brooks, PCAS co-ordinator since 1979. PCASuk is based in the UK and USA  

Thursday, 16 February 2023

REMEMBERING ACTOR GEORGE WOODBRIDGE : THE MUMMY! DRACULA! WEREWOLF! JACK AND MORE!


TODAY we mark the birthday of a face that could be familiar to those of us, who have a liking for early #Hammerfilms and a certain charming children's  television programme of the early 1970's. . . 
 

 
GEORGE WOODBRIDGE, was born on February 16, 1907 in Exeter, Devon, England, UK.  Heavy-set, ruddy-complexioned Devon-born character actor, who specialised in bucolic types, jovial policemen or innkeepers. Perhaps weirdly, he appeared in nine films with Michael Ripper, who for a time also played inn keepers, policemen and soaks, The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan (1953), The Constant Husband (1955), Richard III (1955), The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), The Mummy (1959), The Curse of the Werewolf (1961), Jack The Ripper (1960) Out of the Fog (1962), The Scarlet Blade (1963) Dracula, Prince of Darkness (1966) and The Reptile (1966)..
 



GEORGE'S physical characteristics, natural accent,  portly, rosy cheeked charm, made a memorable character, in most of the films he appeared in, especially comedies. A stand out role was as charming Prison Warder Jenkins,  in the Peter Sellers film 'Two Way Stretch' for the Boulting brothers in 1960. Another great film was the comedy horror, 'What A Carve Up' in 1961. George played Dr Edward Broughton in the film which co-starred Sid James, Kenneth Connor, Esma Cannon and Shirley Eaton. George worked with Peter Cushing in 'The Flesh and the Fiends' and Hammer films 'The Curse of the Werewolf' in 1961, both directed by John Gilling, along with 'The Reptile' in 1966... 
 

IN 1963 George played the Bishop in another classic Boulting Brothers' comedy 'Heavens Above', again starring Sellers. Later roles on the big screen included that of the Publican in the 1970 film 'Take A Girl Like You' and a Fat Bather in the brilliant 1971 big screen adaptation of the Frankie Howerd series 'Up Pompeii'. 
 



AS Woodbridge's popularity grew and his career progressed, the world of television also came calling. Later in his career, George became a regular fixture on the small screen. Having initially debuted in very earliest days of the new medium just before the Second World War, by the 1960s George was appearing in guest roles in the likes of 'Dixon of Dock Green, Softly Softly', 'The Forsyte Saga' and the 'Benny Hill Show'. 
 
 

Nigel Plaskitt, who played Hartley, Tortoise and others, has written this tribute to George Woodbridge, the actor who played Inigo Pipkin and who sadly died during the recording of the second series.

'I first met George on 17th August 1972 when we started rehearsals for series one of Inigo Pipkin. He was playing the title role, and I was more than a little in awe of him.  I'd seen him in many a Hammer horror film as the innkeeper or in any number of British comedy films. He was the voice of experience compared to the rest of us who were just starting out.

He was a charming grandfatherly man who made us all at our ease and he would tell us stories of the ATV Studios at Elstree, now BBC Elstree, where we were shooting the programme, as it was during the days when it was a film studio, pointing out the lawn by the canteen where he had 'swashbuckled' in a pirate film. He loved the idea of making a children's programme and he said to me  "We could be on to a winner here, I think this will run and run". His prediction was true but sadly he never lived to see it as he died five weeks into the shooting of series two on the 30th March 1973.
 

WOODBRIDGE'S career  gained another jump in popularity quite late, as the title character, the puppet maker in the children's TV show, Inigo Pipkin. Sadly, George died five weeks into the filming of the second series, an occurrence which was dealt with in the programme's storyline. The series continued on for another seven years, however, under the revised title of Pipkins. Suffering from ill health by the early 1970s, George continued to act right up until the end. He died from kidney failure in Barnet, North London on 31 March 1973 at the age of 66. But today, we mark George's birthday, a jolly and charming gentleman, with a big heart for his friends, who loved to work and probably left his best until last? Happy Birthday George Woodbridge! 
 

IF YOU LIKE what you see here at our website, you'll  love our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE.  Just click that blue LINK and click LIKE when you get there, and help us . . Keep The Memory Alive!. The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society website, facebook fan page and youtube channel are managed, edited and written by Marcus Brooks, PCAS coordinator since 1979. PCAS is based in the UK and USA  . . 

Monday, 16 January 2023

TALES OF TOM MIX : DEUCES WILD : SCOTT MCCREA LATEST CRACKING WESTERN NOVEL HAS FAMILIAR BAD GUYS & PACKS IN THE BLACK HEARTED VILLIANS A PLENTY

TALES OF TOM MIX is a series of novels set in the sunset days of the Old West, based on the life of Cowboy movie legend Tom Mix; written by Scott McCrea and published by Dusty Saddle Publishing. Born & raised in New York City, Scott McCrea always dreamed of wider horizons. His love of the Old West began when he started reading about Tom Mix, a working cowboy & performer in Wild West shows who became the first big time star of American Western films. Mix’s real life experiences in the rapidly changing West provide an excellent starting point for many different kinds of adventures.

 

When a stranger in town is found to be cheating at cards, the other players take the law into their own hands. Shortly thereafter, the members of the lynch mob start turning up dead. Marshall Tom Mix is in
a race against time to find the killer.


This is a very entertaining whodunnit featuring well written characters and a likable, believable lead. It has a nice period feel; I especially enjoy Tom Mix reading a dime novel on the train. There are enough red herrings to keep you wondering, and the reveal comes at just the right time for the exciting final reel. It’s made even more fun by basing some of the characters on Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, Lon Chaney Jr, Dwight Frye & Vincent Price, with cameos by Glenn Strange, Telly Savalas and Francis DeWolf. Described in terms of some of their more well known characterizations, all are recognizable, with accurate, if not always flattering, descriptions. Christopher Lee is the hardest to describe; aside from his height, he has no remarkable physical features (at least not to the casual cinema goer), a factor which stood him in good stead in his career as a character actor. More might, perhaps, have been made of Lee’s piercing eyes and long, expressive, hands & fingers, or the “Errol Flynn” pinkie, but such descriptions, satisfying as they would be to fans, would not have advanced the plot. As is, knowing that Lee is one of the featured players, it is easy to pick him out of the crowd and he does get by far the most satisfactory death scene, as befits a man who died onscreen so often and so well.

Peter Cushing is easier to describe due to those marvelous cheekbones and he is especially well drawn, with his trademark attention to diction, coldness of attitude (totally at odds with the real man) and dialogue reminiscent of the educated tones of Frankenstein or Van Helsing. There are also a number of references to films in which these various gentlemen appeared, which are a delight to come across. I have not read a lot of Westerns (the few that I did read growing up were mostly about horses), but Western films and TV series were a staple diet of my childhood and adolescence in the 60s. This book reminds me a bit of Gunsmoke, where the Marshall was sweet on the Lady saloon owner and the Bartender was always at hand. These were stories for a simpler time, before the rise of the anti-hero; when the good guys were Good, if a little conflicted. The bad guys might be black hearted villains, or might have some redeeming features, but all paid for their crimes by story’s end. There were, however, few, if any, tales of the time when the Old West was fading away and the modern world asserting itself, like some kind of ivy that takes over a wall, eventually destroying it. This is the small moment in time in which the Tales of Tom Mix are set, with Our Hero holding true to tradition, while aware that times are changing.


Deuces Wild is the 4th novel in the series, following Mountain Killer, Savage Mesa and Cowboy Justice. Tom Mix’s life spanned the end of the Old West and the early days of American cinema. Along the way, he met many legendary people, such as Wyatt Earp, Buffalo Bill Cody, Boris Karloff & John Wayne, any of whom may turn up in stories! And, as we’ve seen in Deuces Wild, there may be other “guest stars” waiting to be discovered.

Colleen Crouch 

Editors Note: As a young child, Peter Cushing was a huge fan of Tom Mix and spent many of pocket-money pennies, visiting the local cinema with his older brother David, enjoying shorts and feature length Tom Mix western adventures, most of which would be re-enacted for weeks later in his garden at home, on his bicycle 'horse', complete with his lasso rope. A dangerous exercise, at the best of times. ' Little did I dream- when all but killing myself with my lasso- that one day I would actually meet the man who had inspired those reckless activities - no less a person than the great Tom Mix himself!' - Peter Cushing, An Autobiography : Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1986
 
All enhanced character photographs in this feature
created and edited by  PCASuk Stills Editor Jamie Somerville
 

For further information, please visit the series’ website www.talesoftommix.com Books are available from the website & also on Amazon, in both hard copy and Kindle formats. HERE!

IF YOU LIKE what you see here at our website, you'll  love our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE.  Just click that blue LINK and click LIKE when you get there, and help us . . Keep The Memory Alive!. The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society website, facebook fan page and youtube channel are managed, edited and written by Marcus Brooks, PCAS coordinator since 1979. PCAS is based in the UK and USA  . . 
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